I am using a number translator to format and parse the number that
gets written to a text field. When I browse the page from a russian
locale, decimal numbers get written as 0,1234 instead of 0.1234, which
is correct. However, when I submit a value with that same format, to
the very same number translator, it complains that it isn't a valid
number. I assume this means that it isn't doing locale sensitive
translation on incoming data, for some reason, since according to
DecimalNumberFormat javadocs, 0.0### should replace the '.' with
whatever the locale specific decimal separator is. Any advice for how
to fix this, or do I have to write my own translator to do this, and
if so, how do I go about doing so.
This is Tap4 in linux and tomcat.
<binding name="translator" value="translator:number,pattern=0.0####"/>
<binding name="validators" value="validators:required,min=0.0001"/>
It is also possible that the problem is actually coming from the
second line, where it is failing to understand 0.0001 when accessed
from a locale that doesn't use '.' as a decimal separator. If so, is
there some way to force the validator to use the default locale when
parsing values from ognl, instead of the page locale?
--sam
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